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Aerial view of Le Portier (Mareterra), Monaco's ninth district, showing Le Renzo, Les Jardins d'Eau, the Villas Collection and the new private marina beside Larvotto

Buy Property in Le Portier / Mareterra, Monaco

Monaco's newest waterfront quarter, inaugurated 4 December 2024. Reclaimed land between Larvotto and Monte-Carlo, home to Le Renzo, Les Jardins d'Eau and the Villas Collection.

Average price€135,000/m² +
Photography by MonacoViews

Le Portier is the quieter and more deliberate end of Monaco. Built on approximately six hectares of land reclaimed from the Mediterranean between Larvotto and Monte-Carlo, it is the first genuinely new neighbourhood the Principality has added in decades. For MonacoViews users, we present it here as Monaco's ninth district.

A note on naming and status. Whether Le Portier officially constitutes Monaco's ninth district depends on the source. Some regard it as a full official district following its inauguration on 4 December 2024; others treat it primarily as a major new eco-district and land-reclamation project sitting within existing administrative boundaries. For user-experience purposes MonacoViews presents it as the ninth district. The two names are largely interchangeable: Mareterra is most often used for the land reclamation and the development as a whole, while Le Portier is most often used for the new private marina at the seaward edge and for the district in administrative contexts.

At a glance

Six things that set Le Portier apart

Three residential components

Le Renzo by Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Les Jardins d'Eau by Valode & Pistre, and the Villas Collection — a small enclave of private villas with direct sea access.

Private Le Portier marina

A protected marina for day boats and resident use, screened from Larvotto beach and the Mediterranean by Le Renzo and Le Mirabeau.

Extended Japanese Garden

The Principality's Japanese Garden was extended across the new land, physically connecting Larvotto beach to Mareterra via the Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway.

BREEAM and HQE eco-architecture

Photovoltaic roofs, rainwater recovery, solar hot water, and 30 per cent planted surface area. Monaco's only photovoltaic-roofed residential buildings sit here.

Scarcity and discretion

The total residential stock is small. Turnover is low, recorded sales are rare, and most transactions are handled privately — the defining character of the address.

Record-setting prices

The April 2026 sale of a five-floor apartment in Le Renzo for €471 million is believed to be one of the largest single residential transactions in history.

Record sale

A €471 million apartment, instantly redefining the global top of the market

In April 2026, Ukrainian businessman Rinat Akhmetov reportedly purchased a five-floor, 21-room waterfront apartment in Le Renzo for €471 million. The transaction is believed to be one of the most expensive single residential property sales in history, and instantly positioned Le Portier as one of the most prestigious and exclusive residential addresses not only in Monaco but globally.

What the sale confirms about the district is simple: supply is small, water frontage is finite, and the addresses here trade on scarcity. Reliable resale comparables will be rare for years to come.

Read the full MonacoViews report: Ukrainian billionaire breaks world property record with €471m Monaco penthouse purchase

Architecture

Three signature buildings and one shared landscape

Le Renzo building at Le Portier, Monaco — the landmark apartment building designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop with cascading terraces

Le Renzo

Designed by the Renzo Piano Building Workshop. The landmark apartment building at the water's edge, distinguished by cascading terraces, photovoltaic roofs, and a mirrored water feature on the ground floor. Home to the record-breaking April 2026 sale.

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Les Jardins d'Eau apartment building at Le Portier / Mareterra, Monaco — designed by Valode & Pistre

Les Jardins d'Eau

Designed by Valode & Pistre. The quieter apartment building set slightly inland from the water, wrapping the extended Japanese Garden and the Pinède Belvédère walkway with large private terraces.

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The Villas Collection and private marina at Le Portier, Monaco, viewed from above

The Villas Collection

A small enclave of private villas with direct sea access, arranged along the seaward side of the peninsula. Ownership is discreet and rarely publicly discussed.

Photography

Le Portier through the MonacoViews lens

Original photographs by the MonacoViews team, captured on location at Mareterra, the Le Portier marina, and the extended Japanese Garden. Coordinates are GPS-recorded on site.

Aerial view of Mareterra and the entrance to the new Le Portier private marina, with Le Mirabeau to the left and Le Renzo to the right and the tall Larvotto buildings in the background
The Le Portier private marina entrance, flanked by Le Mirabeau and Le Renzo
Day boats moored in the exclusive Le Portier private marina at Mareterra, Monaco
Day boats at rest in the private Le Portier marina
View across the mirrored water feature at the base of Le Renzo, looking east towards Roquebrune-Cap-Martin
The mirrored water feature at Le Renzo, looking towards Roquebrune-Cap-Martin
The Stefano Ricci boutique at Mareterra seen across the Le Portier water feature, with Les Jardins d'Eau apartments behind
Stefano Ricci across the water feature, Les Jardins d'Eau behind
Monaco's Japanese Garden with Les Jardins d'Eau residential complex visible beyond
The extended Japanese Garden, with Les Jardins d'Eau beyond
The Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway at Mareterra between Les Jardins d'Eau and the Japanese Garden, leading directly to Larvotto
The Pinède Belvédère walkway linking Le Portier to Larvotto
Monaco's Japanese Garden sitting between Les Jardins d'Eau, Le Renzo and the Grimaldi Forum exhibition centre
The Japanese Garden: between Les Jardins d'Eau, Le Renzo and the Grimaldi Forum
View across Larvotto beach and Monaco's eastern coastline from Mareterra, with the Mediterranean in the foreground
Larvotto beach seen from Mareterra
The Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway at Mareterra, a shaded pinewood pedestrian promenade
The Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway at Mareterra
Location

Where Le Portier sits

Le Portier bridges Larvotto beach to the east and Monte-Carlo to the west. The Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway runs along the upper level of the peninsula, linking Larvotto directly through the Japanese Garden and Les Jardins d'Eau to the water's edge at Le Renzo.

From the district, Casino Square is approximately five minutes on foot, the Grimaldi Forum is immediately adjacent, and the Japanese Garden is both a public amenity and a private landscape for residents.

Adjacent districts and landmarks

  • Larvottodirectly accessible via the Pinède Belvédère walkway. Larvotto beach is Monaco's principal stretch of sand.
  • Monte-Carlofive minutes on foot via the coastal route. Casino Square, the Hôtel de Paris, and the Carré d'Or.
  • The new Le Portier private marinaday-boat moorings and protected berthing at the seaward edge.
  • The extended Japanese Garden — connecting Larvotto to Mareterra through stone, water and sculpted pines.
  • Grimaldi Forum — convention centre immediately adjacent.
Buying in Le Portier

Mostly off-market, almost always private

Le Portier residences rarely appear on open portals. The residential stock is small by Monaco standards, the developer's original allocations are largely complete, and most transactions are handled privately through preferred agents or direct introductions.

If you are serious about the address, the practical path is to register a specific buyer brief with MonacoViews. We will route credible opportunities to you as they surface.

Frequently asked about Le Portier

What is Le Portier in Monaco?
Le Portier is Monaco's newest waterfront district, also known by the developer brand Mareterra. Inaugurated on 4 December 2024, it occupies approximately six hectares of land reclaimed from the Mediterranean between Larvotto and Monte-Carlo. The district houses three residential components (Le Renzo, Les Jardins d'Eau and the Villas Collection), a new private marina called Le Portier, an extension of the Japanese Garden, and the Pinède Belvédère Gérard Brianti walkway.
Is Le Portier officially Monaco's ninth district?
Whether Le Portier officially constitutes Monaco's ninth district depends on the source. Some regard it as a full official district following its inauguration on 4 December 2024; others treat it primarily as a major new eco-district and land-reclamation project sitting within existing administrative boundaries. For user-experience purposes MonacoViews presents Le Portier as the ninth district while being transparent about the nuance.
What is the difference between Le Portier and Mareterra?
The two names are largely interchangeable. In everyday usage, "Mareterra" most often describes the land reclamation and the residential development as a whole, while "Le Portier" is most often used for the new private marina at the district's seaward edge and for the district in administrative contexts. Both names are widely used and MonacoViews uses them together.
What buildings are in Le Portier / Mareterra?
The district contains three residential components. Le Renzo, designed by the Renzo Piano Building Workshop, is the landmark apartment building at the water's edge with cascading terraces and a mirrored water feature on the ground floor. Les Jardins d'Eau, designed by Valode & Pistre, is the quieter apartment building set slightly inland. The Villas Collection is a small enclave of private villas with direct sea access.
What was the €471 million Monaco apartment sale?
In April 2026, Ukrainian businessman Rinat Akhmetov reportedly purchased a five-floor, 21-room waterfront apartment in Le Renzo for €471 million. This is believed to be one of the most expensive single residential property transactions in history and instantly established Le Portier as one of the most prestigious residential addresses in Monaco and globally.
Can I buy or rent property in Le Portier?
Residences in Le Portier rarely appear on the open market. The residential stock is small by Monaco standards and most transactions are handled privately, off-market. Buyers serious about the address should register a buyer brief with MonacoViews to be notified of credible opportunities rather than relying on scraped public listings.